MIRA Events Calendar 2011/2012

13 June 2012
Workshop on "Companies Act & Regulations" by Tricor Corporate Services

07 June 2012
CIR Exam

09 & 10 May 2012
CIR Revision Course

08 May 2012
Seminar on "Finance 101 for Investor Relations" by Columbus Circle Governance

19 April 2012
Seminar on "Management Discussion & Analysis - Bursa's Guidelines" and "Shareholder Newsletters - What Works Best" by Columbus Circle Governance

10 April 2012
Workshop on "Regulatory Environment Pre-IPO" and "Continuous Listing Obligations of Listed Corporation" by Tricor Corporate Services

15 March 2012
Seminar on "Corporate Social Responsibility - The Emerging Trend" by Paragon Corporation Sdn Bhd

23 February 2012
Seminar on "How To Get Your Message Through" by RK Biz Connect

15 Feb 2012
MIRA workshop on "Key Amendments to Listing Requirements & Corporate Disclosure Guide – 2011" by Tricor Corporate Services

19 Jan 2012
MIRA Insights - What's in store in the Year of the Dragon by UOB Kay Hian

15 Dec 2011
Workshop on "Companies Act & Regulations" by Tricor Corporate Services

16 Nov 2011
Workshop on "Adding Value Through Annual Reports" by Columbus Circle Governance

20 October 2011
MIRA workshop on "Listing Requirements of Bursa Malaysia - Corporate Disclosure Policy & Overview on Chapter 10 - Transactions" by Tricor Corporate Services.

18 October 2011
2012 Budget Proposals - Tax Changes and Its Impact on Businesses

21 September 2011
Workshop on "Don't just manage expectations, Shape Analysts' Expectations"

25 August 2011
Workshop on "Regulatory Environment for Listed Corporations - Pre & Post Listing" by Tricor Corporate Services

10 August 2011
Workshop on "The Securities Commission's New Corporate Governance Blueprint - What Does It Mean For Your Company?"

07 July 2011
Workshop on "What directors should know about the investor mindset" by Columbus Circle Governance

29 June 2011
Workshop on "Looking beyond Financial Statements" by Mr. James Oh

18 May 2011
MIRA Insight - Uncover practical steps to develop and implement an effective Investor Relations programme by ZJ Advisory

31 March 2011
"Common pitfalls under Chapter 10 of Listing Requirements - Transactions" and "Understanding of proposed Goods & Services Tax (GST) implementation in Malaysia"

10 March 2011
"A look at the relationship between trading, ownership, fund flows and company valuation" by Ipreo

19 January 2011
Seminar on "Malaysian Companies Act & Regulations" and "Corporate Disclosure Policy & Overview on Chapter 10 of Listing Requirement - Transaction"

From CEO's Desk - Letter to our valuable members

There are various pieces of information that companies can put in their annual report or website that helps investors understand a whole lot about the company.

One example is to provide a table that shows changes in the share capital over time. For instance, today a company may have a share capital of RM200 million comprising 2 billion ten sen shares, whereas ten years ago at IPO its share capital was RM40 million at RM1 par value. How did it get to where it is today?

By providing a chronological table of corporate exercises, say, share placement, rights issue, bonus issue, new share issue for acquisitions, capital repayment, share split or share consolidation, investors will have an idea of the how the company was capitalised over time. Prospective investors would see the history of corporate activities at a glance. It also gives an impression of how active the company has been throughout the years.

If say, at some point the company had made a capital repayment, then it becomes clear why it had experienced a share capital reduction. Investors would have understood that point, and would be pleased to know that the company had returned money to shareholders. This would put the company in a good light as opposed to letting potential investors wonder what had caused the share capital erosion.

A shareholder, who used to own the shares of the company may remember the time when it was trading at a certain price, but not having followed the counter for some time, may find that it is now trading at a lower price level. If the table clearly sets out the information that the company had made a bonus issue along the way, which had cause the share price to be adjusted accordingly, then the prospective investor would have quickly understood the reasons for a lower price point, rather than misguidedly thinking that the share price had dropped. Also, the prospective investor would have understood that the company had at that point in time, accumulated a sufficiently large share premium account that allowed the bonus issue to be made.

By putting such information in the annual report or website, companies increase the chances that a potential investor will explore the company further. Of course investors can do their own research but few have time to delve into one company, especially smaller companies, unless they are very interested. Few have time to go through so many corporate announcements or past annual reports of one company, nor do they want to match data, crunch numbers and figure it out.

The idea is to save time for the investor, including analysts and shareholders. And help expedite the investment decision process of potential investors.

 

Eddie Razak
March 2009


Click here to view Mar 2009 letter
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